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A35
world
November 29, 2015 www.guardian.co.tt Sunday Guardian
V
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1129069
President Vladimir Putin is fully
mobilized to tackle what the Krem-
lin regards as an unprecedented
threat from Turkey following the
shooting down of one of its war-
planes by a Turkish F-16, the Russ-
ian leader's spokesman said yes-
terday.
In comments which underscore
how angry the Kremlin still is over
the incident, Dmitry Peskov, Putin's
spokesman, called the behaviour of
the Turkish air force "absolute mad-
ness" and said Ankara's subsequent
handling of the crisis had reminded
him of the "theatre of the absurd."
"Nobody has the right to traitor-
ously shoot down a Russian plane
from behind," Peskov said, calling
Turkish evidence purporting to show
the Russian SU-24 jet had violated
Turkish air space "cartoons".
In another sign of tensions after
its shooting down of the Russian
plane on Tuesday, which resulted in
the death of one of the pilots,
Turkey's foreign ministry advised
people yesterday to postpone all non-
urgent travel to Russia.
Peskov said the crisis had prompt-
ed Putin, whose ministers are prepar-
ing retaliatory economic measures
against Turkey, to "mobilize" in the
way an army does in tense times.
"The president is mobilized, fully
mobilized, mobilized to the extent
that circumstances demand," said
Peskov.
"The circumstances are unprece-
dented. The gauntlet thrown down
to Russia is unprecedented. So nat-
urally the reaction is in line with this
threat."
President Tayyip Erdogan has said
Turkey will not apologise for downing
the jet, but he said yesterday that
the incident had saddened him and
that the climate change summit in
Paris next week could be a chance
to repair relations with Moscow.
"Confrontation will not bring any-
one happiness.
As much as Russia is important
for Turkey, Turkey is important for
Russia," Erdogan said in a televised
speech in the western city of Balik-
sehir.
Peskov said Putin was aware of a
Turkish request for him to meet
Erdogan on the sidelines of the Paris
conference but gave no indication of
whether such a meeting would take
place.
Peskov denied Turkish press
reports which said Moscow and
Ankara had struck a deal for their
warplanes to stop flying along the
Syrian-Turkish border, saying military
ties between the two countries had
been severed and a hot line meant
to avoid misunderstandings among
their pilots dismantled.
He added that there could be up
to 200,000 Turkish citizens on Russ-
ian soil. (Reuters)
Putin 'fully mobilised' to tackle threat from Turkey---Kremlin